![]() The humble worm farm! In all shapes and sizes this miracle of organic technology is found in many a household. Hidden in the gardens back corner this beacon of sustainability receives few of the merits it deserves. At Future Feeders however we are super excited to have our worm farm going and we want you to know about it! Today we installed our first or many - a modular bathtub design worm farm. After our recent call for bathtubs was answered with a delivery of tubs we have all been eager to get this project on the go and the worms into action. As with all new projects, development offers the opportunity for learning and skills sharing so our Sunday session in the market garden proved to be the perfect time to get together and get worm farming. A rummage around the community gardens integrated resource centre provided the necessary materials for the simplest of systems and so with little more than some 44gallon drums and old steel girders we had a sufficient platform to bear the weight and to mount the bathtubs at a practical height. Its great when striping things back to their simplest form work so well - and costs us nothing! Once the foundations were there the next steps where just as simple and relevant to any worm farm design! `1 : Wire mesh and shade cloth was laid over the plug hole and in the bath base to assist drainage `2 : A layer of damp cardboard was put down first `3 : Followed by a thick layer of hydrated coconut coir peat. `4 : In finally go the worms `5 : Covered thereafter with a good feed of kitchen scraps `6 : and finally with layer of old carpet to keep them worm, dark and moist. `7 : we covered the whole tub with a sheet of corrugated iron to keep excess rainwater out `8 : and little more is needed to collect the 'worm-juice' than to leave a bucket under the hole So from small things big things grow. We plan now as the worm population establishes itself to expand into the other two tubs and then as we can, source more baths to continue to build our worm farm operations.
We are all excited about the prospects of having this amazing nutrient dense fertilizer available to feed our market garden with and having the fresh worm casts to add to our seed raising mix. Simple pleasures from a simple system, turning waste into a valuable resource! We will be looking for more baths so If you have one or more available please let us know.
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![]() Most people who get to meander through a Macadamia plantation will marvel at the closely packed trees and lush dense canopy of these attractive natives, but after having spent three days raking the nuts for harvest up-hill and down-dale through the farm, my perspective is a bit different. Aching back aside I’ve spent three days looking at perhaps the more important element of the farm. The soil! It has been a treat to have some casual work on a local family run Maca farm in the region. A taste of the industry and a closer look at a successful operation and a chance to chat with a well seasoned farmer. The Byron Bay hinterland is the land of the Macadamia and the industry here is well established. These farms are in general well oiled machines, highly mechanised, and geared towards productivity. It comes as little shock then that as with all conventional, large scale industrial monocultures this agribusiness has some pretty serious effects on both the landscape and the environment. What surprised me most about this particular farm was some pretty un-conventional practices and coming from my own ecological and organic farming framework I was pleased, inspired and intrigued to see a conventional farmer utilising a number of techniques to improve his soil, encourage ecology and reduce the need for chemical applications. Huge steaming piles of mulch are laid out throughout the farm and the orchard floor has a thick mat of mulch and nut husks throughout. There are no bare roots or signs of significant erosion on the farm, the usual clear indicators of poor soil management. Here is a farmer who respects his dirt. I counted a wide variety of fruiting mushrooms and constantly as I raked nuts and leaves did I expose rich mats of Mycelium. Also dotted about the farm were the tell-tale signatures of introduced parasitic wasps. Cardboard roles stapled to leaves containing ready to hatch eggs, a component of the reasonably new integrated pest management (IPM) practices to combat nut boring insect. Reports are that it is working well. In newer sections of the farm where the younger trees have yet to shade out ground covers, varieties of native grasses and herbaceous weeds were left long to harbor and support a rich ecosystem for insects and birds. Regularly my thoughts were interrupted by a shrill call of Whip birds, Currawong and Kookaburra from the canopy. Sections of rainforest have also been left established throughout the farm adding a further element to the dynamic ecology of the farm.
Talking with him about his farm practices you could quickly detect a humble respect for the land. Here is a farmer that is not simply driven to capitilize on every opportunity for yield, but a farmer with a son who also works the farm and a understanding for the need to protect the living assets for the future. Ideas I shared about making compost from his husks and compost tea applications for foliar sprays and soil conditioners received nods of approval but his response was that it may well be too late to teach an old dog new tricks. He has begun the journey of making his farm sustainable and as he enters his seventies he admits perhaps its high time someone else did the thinking. I marvel at the conviction of a farmer who goes the extra mile to spread mulch and care for his soil. There is no premium price for his nut for using less spray. With little incentive other than satisfaction - I wondered how do we encourage and nourish these fringe transitional farmers. How do we reward their efforts and continue to stimulate change towards more sustainable practices? Is there a role here for young farmers to act as the mentors for change. |
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August 2016
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